Northumbria Police have had their suspension from a Government stop and search scheme lifted.

Last year, then Home Secretary Theresa May wrote to 13 police forces, including Northumbria, informing them that they had been suspended from the Best Use of Stop and Search scheme with immediate effect and must achieve full compliance if they want to be readmitted.

The scheme was launched in the summer of 2014 and requires member forces to demonstrate to the public that they are using the powers of stop and search fairly, effectively and in a way that builds community confidence.

Requirements included recording the outcome of all stops (including whether there is a link with the initial reason for the stop), restricting the use of section 60 ‘no-suspicion’ powers, community scrutiny of complaints and offering the public the chance to observe stop and search in action.

However, an inspection by HM Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) in 2015 found 13 member forces, including Northumbria Police, were failing to meet three or more of the scheme’s requirements, and Mrs May suspended their membership.

But now, the HMIC has published the findings of its re-inspection, which confirmed that all 13 forces are now fully compliant with all features of the Best Use of Stop and Search scheme.

The Home Secretary has therefore written to the chief constables and PCCs of these forces confirming that their scheme membership has been reinstated.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said: “This Government introduced the Best Use of Stop and Search Scheme to ensure that forces apply these powers fairly, effectively and in a way that builds community confidence.

“Since the scheme has been in place, the number of stop and searches has reduced, the disproportionate impact on BME communities has decreased and stop-to-arrest ratios are at their highest ever level.

Read More

“All forces voluntarily signed up to the scheme two years ago and must deliver on their promised commitments. Any force that fails to do so will have their membership publicly revoked.

“I welcome yesterday’s findings from HMIC and have written to Northumbria Police, which had previously been suspended, confirming that I have reinstated their membership of the scheme in full.”

In 2014, the Government announced a comprehensive package for reform of the use of stop and search to ensure the police use all such powers lawfully, in a targeted and intelligence-led way, and that communities are able to hold the police to account for their use.

Ms Rudd added: “Scrutiny of these powers will continue, and I have commissioned HMIC to re-examine all forces’ use of stop and search next year to ensure the powers are being exercised fairly, effectively and proportionately.”